The High Court's consideration of Section 116 has generally been limited to three areas: the definition of "religion"; the meaning of "law for establishing any religion"; and the meaning of "law for prohibiting the free exercise of any religion". The court has never ruled a legislative provision to be in contravention of Section 116. As a result of the court's narrow and literal interpretation of Section 116, the provision has played a minor role in Australian constitutional history.
Meaning of "religion" A threshold test considered by courts applying Section 116 is whether a belief seeking constitutional protection is a "religion". The leading authority on the question is the 1983 judgment of the High Court in
Church of the New Faith v Commissioner for Pay-Roll Tax (Vic). The court found that
Scientology was a religion, despite some justices commenting that its practices were "impenetrably obscure". In reaching this finding, the court argued that the definition of religion needed to be flexible but should recognise the need to be sceptical of disingenous claims of religious practice. Justices
Ronald Wilson and
William Deane were less prescriptive, setting out five "indicia" of a religion: a belief in the supernatural; a belief in ideas relating to "man's nature and place in the universe"; the adherence to particular standards, codes of conduct or practices by those who hold the ideas; the existence of an identifiable group of believers, even if not a formal organisation; and the opinion of the believers that what they believe in constitutes a religion.
"Establishing any religion" The courts have taken a narrow approach to the interpretation of the prohibition against "establishing any religion", deriving from the 1981 case of
Attorney-General (Vic) (Ex rel Black) v Commonwealth (known as the
DOGS case or 'State Aid' Case), in which the High Court held that Commonwealth funding of religious schools did not contravene Section 116. Chief Justice
Garfield Barwick held that a law would only contravene the provision if establishing a religion was its "express and single purpose", while Justice
Harry Gibbs argued that the section only prohibits the establishment of an official state religion. Each justice in the majority contrasted Section 116 with its equivalent in the US Constitution to find that Section 116 is narrower. The court noted that the US Constitution prohibits laws respecting "establishment of religion" generally, whereas the prohibition in Section 116 is against the establishment of "
any religion": this meant that Section 116 did not encompass laws that benefit religions generally; it only proscribed laws that established a particular religion. The approach of the High Court to the establishment limb of Section 116 thus largely reflects the views expressed by Constitutional scholars
John Quick and
Robert Garran in 1901, that establishment means "the erection and recognition of a State Church, or the concession of special favours, titles, and advantages to one church which are denied to others."
"Prohibiting the free exercise of any religion" The protection of the free exercise of religion was also interpreted narrowly in early High Court judgments. In 1912, the court in
Krygger v Williams, held that a person could not object to compulsory military service on the ground of religious belief. However, in 1943, the court continued the narrow approach it took in
Krygger v Williams, upholding war-time regulations that caused the
Adelaide branch of the Jehovah's Witnesses to be dissolved and have its property acquired by the Commonwealth government. The government had declared the branch to be an organisation whose activities were "prejudicial to the defence of the Commonwealth": one of the branch's professed beliefs was that the government was an "organ of
Satan". Chief Justice
John Latham held that the Constitution permitted the court to "reconcile religious freedom with ordered government". In a 1997 case known as the
Stolen Generations Case, the court upheld an ordinance issued in 1918 that enabled the forcible removal of
Indigenous Australian children from their families. The court reasoned that the purpose of the ordinance was not to prohibit the free exercise of religion even though the ordinance may have had that effect. Peter Edge, an academic specialising in religion and the law, thus concludes that Section 116 will only "prevent legislation that has a prohibited purpose, rather than a prohibited effect". In her judgment, Gaudron J, while finding that the provision "cannot be construed as impliedly conferring an independent or free-standing right which, if breached,
sounds in damages at the suit of the individual whose interests are thereby affected" left open the possibility that it might nonetheless, in limiting Commonwealth legislative power, apply to a provision that has the effect, as opposed merely to the purpose, of limiting free exercise. ==Commentary==